Two Colorado guys are on MTV’s “The Real World: DC,” premiering Dec. 30 in all its gory glory.

Andrew Woods, 21, from Denver joins Mike Manning, 22, from Thornton to live with six other twenty- somethings in the swanky DuPont Circle neighborhood in Washington. They auditioned in Boulder — but they’re pretty different dudes.

Woods, an off-the-wall cartoonist with a very goofy personality, tells me: “I definitely lived it up and made the most of my experience. I am the one person who can say I did everything I could possibly do. I got drunk. I got into fights. I am very satisfied.”

He often wears a panda hat and brags that he’s been fired from every job he’s ever had.

Manning, a studly jock type, opens up to his roomies that he’s questioning his sexuality. That ups the ante.

Both Woods and Manning are a little apprehensive as to how they’ll look on the show and what their parents might think of them.

“There are definitely some moments when I don’t look my best,” Woods says.

“I am really close to my parents,” Manning says. “I warned them about what they’re going to see, but seeing something is a lot different than hearing about it.”

They’re both ready for their 15 minutes. Are we?

ACTION!

The indy film “Walk-Ins Welcome” just wrapped production in Colorado after shooting for eight weeks in Brighton, Boulder and Denver. The film, which makers hope will hit the fest circuit, then the big screen and DVD, is the directorial debut of local Jonathan Stein and is described as a “campy, sci-fi, romantic comedy set in Tumbleweed, Colorado.”

Shanny’s.

Marc Steron was down and out with a cold last weekend — just a week before the friends-and- family opening of his new restaurant, Shanahan’s, at Interstate 25 and East Belleview Avenue in the Denver Tech Center. Now he’s fine. He has to be. He has a hot restaurant to open.

So I walked through the joint without him Saturday. It’s some swanky spot. I’ll be on vacation when it opens to the public Thursday. My colleague Penny “Porterhouse” Parker will give you the buzz.